All images © Nic Tenwiggenhorn Art can be hard to understand sometimes, as Thomas Schutte’s “Holiday Home for Terrorists” well proves . The German artist, not architect, designed and built this chic, modern house tucked away in the forest of Mosern, Austria on Polish art dealer Rafael Jablonka’s summer home property. Jablonka commissioned the house as a
Archivo de la etiqueta: 9/11
dbox wins Emmy for “Rising: Rebuilding Ground Zero”
The New York-based branding and creative agency dbox has won an Emmy for its CGI and Branding work on the Discovery Channel’s six part mini-series Rising: Rebuilding Ground Zero. From executive producer by Steven Spielberg, the series chronicles the activity of the Ground Zero site and the personal stories of the construction workers, engineers and architects who have made the rebuilding vision a reality.
Enjoy the trailer above and check out ArchDaily’s previous September 11th coverage for more information on each project:
National September 11 Memorial / Handel Architects with Peter Walker
National September 11 Memorial Museum / Davis Brody Bond
Ground Zero Master Plan / Studio Daniel Libeskind
Rising from Tragedy: A Conversation with Calatrava, Childs, and Libeskind
Flight 93 National Memorial / Paul Murdoch Architects
Pentagon Memorial / KBAS Studio
dbox wins Emmy for “Rising: Rebuilding Ground Zero” originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 07 Oct 2012.
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Ground Zero Master Plan / Studio Daniel Libeskind

With last year’s opening of the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero and the near-completion of the World Trade Center One, Daniel Libeskind’s vision for the World Trade Center site is close to presenting the future of NYC’s downtown financial center, 11 years after the attacks. Studio Daniel Libeskind was selected to develop the master plan for the site in 2003, and since has been coordinating with NYC’s numerous agencies and individual architects to rebuild the site. The project, in Libeskind’s words, is a “healing of New York”, a “site of memory” and “a space to witness the resilience of America”.
Follow us after the break for more on the elements and progress of the master plan.

The master plan supplies the framework for the massing and location of the program elements of the site, building heights and size and relationship to one another. It includes guidelines for infrastructure, transportation, sustainability standards and security strategies. The 16-acre site includes 4 towers, a Transportation Hub, Visitors Pavilion, Memorial Museum, and Memorial each with its own architect, providing a collaborative agenda for the masterplan.

Early sketches of Libeskind’s design feature an energy of interconnectedness among the landmarks of New York City – the shine of the Statue of Liberty with the spires of the towers, for example. Libeskind’s plan called for a holistic design that addressed the site as much more than “just a piece of real-estate”. In the video below, Libeskind describes the buildings that will fill the site as being a foundation for a new, inspired city speaking to the values of New York and America.
Libeskind speaks emotionally about the signifiance of the memorial and its particular presence on the site, including the way it interacts with the existing slurry wall that was built to hold back the Hudson River and the future towers that will rise above it on the site. The Memorial, designed by Michael Arad of Handel Architects, with landscape architect Peter Walker, involves two large square pools on the sunken site. Waterfalls cascade into the center, clouding the actual depth, but giving the impression that it disappears deep within the bedrock of New York, the foundation of the city’s values and accomplishments. Bronze panels around the perimeter of the two pools have inscribed names of the victims of both the 2001 and 1993 attacks. The site is shielded, both visually and acoustically by groves of trees planted around the perimeter and the sound of the waterfalls.

The Visitor’s Pavilion, designed by Snøhetta, is the only above-grade portion of the memorial site among the fountains that also serves as an entrance to the Memorial Museum. The facade echos elements of the original towers with steel mullions that wrap around the semi-organic geometry of the form. Two steel tridents from the towers are on view in the pavilion and are on display for the city through large glazed portions of the facade which also direct light down into the museum. Below the plaza, the subterranean Memorial Museum, designed by Davis Brody Bond serves as an icon that memorializes elements from the towers, including salvaged structural columns and views of the slurry wall. In this way, the museum is contained within the artifacts of the towers and serve as memory, as Libeskind says, “of the resilience of America”.
The towers are envisioned as spiraling around the memorial site, with Tower 1 being the tallest and the others progressively shorter. Libeskind says the intension for the this massing strategy was to distribute the real estate among several buildings, remaining faithful to New York City’s grid, and maintaining a level of street life for a visceral experience of the site. One World Trade Center, also known as the Freedom Tower, is now nearing completion. Designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, the 1,776-foot tall tower will be the tallest tower in New York City. The tower is designed as a beacon for the city, and in conjunction with the other three towers planned for the site, will echo the lantern of the statue of liberty. Visually rising from the bedrock of the Memorial Museum, the tower recalls both the foundation at the bedrock level to the aspirations of the city at the spire. View more progress photos here.

Tower 2 by Foster and Partners, the second tallest tower at 1,349 feet is a mixed use building that will connect the street level with the below-grade WTC Transportation Hub. The diamond-shaped summit of the tower slopes down to the memorial below and along with Tower 1 echos the Statue of Liberty’s lantern. Tower 3 by Rogers Stirk Harbour + Partnership will rise to a height of 1,240 feet and includes visible diamond bracing on the sides of the tower. Tower 4, the shortest of the towers, is designed by Maki and Associates. It is the end of the spiral of towers that Libeskind describes and steps down towards the memorial site. The towers are all in the process of being constructed and will be completed between September 2012 and 2013.

The construction Santiago Calatrava‘s signature Transportation Hub is well on its way to serve PATH customers on their daily commute. Check out a video of the space here, courtesy of the Wall Street Journal featuring the sinuous interior that will include connections between PATH customers and 12 subway lines as well as retail spaces. Scheduled for completion in 2014, after a series of delays, the hub is unlike anything NYC currently has to offer by way of transportation concourses. For one it is more transparent, allowing nature light to flood the interior.

Over the years there have been hiccups with the plan, debates among the architects, and divergent design goals but in an interview last year with the Huffington Post, Libeskind says, “I’m so happy to be able to design a piece of this city” and although he is not responsible for the design of the any of individual buildings as was intended, his “broad strokes”‘ over the master plan provide the framework for a revived financial center that is an integration of public and private space that collectively captures a site of memory with the values of America: “freedom, liberty, a participatory society, and tolerance”. At the 2012 AIA National Convention, the architects of the World Trade Center Site received a tribute for their work as “Architects of Healing”.

















Ground Zero Master Plan / Studio Daniel Libeskind originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 23 Sep 2012.
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The Shard: A Skyscraper For Our Post-9/11 World?

When the Twin Towers came down 11 years ago (almost to the day), the world was struck numb. Even New Yorkers, who felt the trauma rumble through their veins, couldn’t get past the initial disbelief: how can this be happening? How can something so big, so invincible, actually be so vulnerable?
Hundreds of comments have been hurled at Renzo Piano’s “Shard,” the massive, reflective skyscraper that hulks over the London skyline – it’s big, no, huge; it’s out of the context of its Victorian neighborhood; its exclusive price tag could only be footed by Qatar royalty (as it is) – but few, beyond writing off the tower as a symbol of arrogance or hubris, have stopped to consider its impetus.
For that, we must look at the Shard in the context of 9/11. Only then can the Shard be understood for what it is: the amplification and perfection of the glass tower Piano began in post-9/11 New York, a utopian vision that stands defiantly in defense of the city itself.

The Language of Piano
When you consider the works of Renzo Piano, it would be difficult to discern a signature “style.” Which is fine by him (he hates the word). For Piano, architecture is about telling the story of the building he designs. And, as he puts it, “How can you tell such [different stories] with the same language?”
There are, of course, themes that recur in Piano’s ouevre. Even from his first major work, the Centre Pompidou he designed with Richard Rogers, Piano was attuned to the sea-changes of the time: a distrust of the institution, a desire to break down the formalities of the past, a need for community space. Thus, the Pompidou became “a joyful urban machine” designed for human interaction.
And while you can certainly point to Piano’s obsession with craftsmanship – Piano comes from a family of builders after all – his experimental efforts with physical materials are almost always meant to explore their very un-physical potential for “flight.”
Lightness, transparency, vibrancy – these characteristics constantly present themselves in Piano’s work, and they have been fine-tuned over time. The Menil Collection, completed in the mid-80s, was Piano’s first triumph in light; ever since, his architecture, unlike any other, has somehow learned to “capture the sun.”

Terrorism vs. Transparency
Thus when Piano begin his design for The New York Times building in New York, transparency and “contextuality” were two sides of the same coin. Piano, who was in New York the day of the terrorist attacks, designed a skyscraper with validity in a post-9/11 world: in comparison to the bulky opacity of the World Trade Center, Piano opted for a tower of light, of transparency, of permeability.
The New York Times architecture critic at the time, Nicolai Ouroussoff, who was working in the building as he wrote his critique, couldn’t hide his delight of it. Ouroussoff found it to be reminiscent of “a more comforting time,” a New York of the 50s and 60s, and, if I may extrapolate, of the 90s, when there was confidence in the marvelous structures that characterized the city.
The tower’s ground floors are open to the public, allowing people to pass through as they journey from 40th to 41st street; Ouroussoff marveled at the “continuous public performance:” “The flow recalls the dynamic energy of Grand Central Terminal’s Great Hall or the Rockefeller Center plaza, proud emblems of early-20th-century mobility.”

The only flaw that Ouroussoff noted was the tower’s rooftop – which, instead of “gathering momentum as it rises” and “dissolving into the sky,” as Piano intended, just “seems to fizzle.”
The building was an attempt to capture the workings of the city itself; Piano wanted the building to stand as an emblem, but at the same time dissolve into the bustle of the city streets. As he told BBC correspondent Razia Iqbal in a fascinating interview:
“There are no technical answers to terrorism – the only technical answer would be living in caverns, which is impossible. Which is why we built The New York Times building transparent and permeable, because transparency is safer than opacity. [...] You cannot answer the risk of terrorism by giving up on the idea of a city being a great human invention, we have to defend it.”
The New York Times Building may have been the first incarnation of Piano’s desire to defend the city, but it was the Shard that would be its ultimate expression.

A Shard Cut From New York’s Cloth
When Hal Foster, a Princeton University Professor, was asked his opinion of The Shard by The Guardian, he quipped, “It looks like a project from the 9/11 competition which grew frustrated with delays on the Hudson and moved to the Thames.” Indeed, each element that Piano considered in the post-9/11 context of the NYT Building is only intensified in the Shard.
The permeability of the New York Times building, which Piano engendered in order to encourage human interaction and movement (causing Ouroussoff to liken its lobby to Grand Central Station), is already inherent to the Shard, as it’s physically placed atop one of London’s most crowded Transportation Hubs. In fact, it was that location which justified the Shard’s existence in Piano’s mind: the Hub was “one of the few positions [in London] where you can have towers.”
Further vital to the Shard’s identity is its multi-functionality, which enhances its permeability further. Piano was insistent that the Shard be filled with restaurants and shops, so the public could use it at all hours of the day – not just until 6pm. Also key is a public viewing gallery, where the public could partake of the building’s staggering views.
Moreover, the glass, which gave The New York Times Tower its transparency, is different in the Shard. Rather than merging with its context, it responds to it; as the light changes, the facade reflects the river, the sky, the city. The pinnacle, which awkwardly “fizzled” in the New York tower, with the Shard, “dissolves into the sky,” to the point where, in Piano’s words, it “breathes in the clouds.”
Unlike the New York Times Building, which depends on the activity around it to give it life, The Shard is very much its own, living entity. Piano’s utopian monument to the city – dense, diverse, and multi-functional - of the 21st century.

The Awful Truth
Of course, as much as the Shard proclaims London’s position as a global city of the future, responding to the context of London as a whole, it comes at the expense of the neighborhood it calls home.
Despite Piano’s claim that the Transportation Hub justifies the Shard, there is no denying the modern skyscraper is completely disruptive to its Victorian surroundings. Nor can it be denied that the Shard would never have been allowed in a historical neighborhood whose residents had money and power – unlike in Southwark, one of London’s poorer boroughs.
And while Piano’s tower extends to the public of London, it has little to offer its immediate neighbors, except, as Nick Stanton, a former leader of Southwark council complained, to walk around it. With a pricey luxury hotel and private apartments leased out to Qatar royalty on the upper floors, it’s hard to imagine the public offerings will be cost-effective. Even the viewing gallery, the supposed “equalizer,” will cost visitors a staggering £24.95 (about $40) a ticket.
The awful truth is that the Shard belongs to London. Just not to Southwark.

In Defense and Defiance
The Shard, which is currently the pinnacle of Renzo Piano’s long, inspired career, has stirred up controversy for its size, its location, its ownership. But it is also a reflection of what a skyscraper, if it is to exist at all, must be in a post-9/11 world.
At that same BBC Interview, a Londoner walked up to the microphone to ask Mr. Piano a question: “I think since 9/11 we’ve been worried a little bit, I have anyway, about iconic buildings. Are you worried that it’s throwing out a bit of a defiant message, towering over London the way it does?”
For Piano, that defiance was the point – but it was also a gamble. Indeed, to some, this glass tower will always be an offensive re-incarnation of the arrogance and power of our pre-9/11 world; but, in the masterful hands of Piano, it’s a quietly intense defense of the city itself.
The Shard: A Skyscraper For Our Post-9/11 World?

When the Twin Towers came down 11 years ago (almost to the day), the world was struck numb. Even New Yorkers, who felt the trauma rumble through their veins, couldn’t get past the initial disbelief: how can this be happening? How can something so big, so invincible, actually be so vulnerable?
Hundreds of comments have been hurled at Renzo Piano’s “Shard,” the massive, reflective skyscraper that hulks over the London skyline – it’s big, no, huge; it’s out of the context of its Victorian neighborhood; its exclusive price tag could only be footed by Qatar royalty (as it is) – but few, beyond writing off the tower as a symbol of arrogance or hubris, have stopped to consider its impetus.
For that, we must look at the Shard in the context of 9/11. Only then can the Shard be understood for what it is: the amplification and perfection of the glass tower Piano began in post-9/11 New York, a utopian vision that stands defiantly in defense of the city itself.

The Language of Piano
When you consider the works of Renzo Piano, it would be difficult to discern a signature “style.” Which is fine by him (he hates the word). For Piano, architecture is about telling the story of the building he designs. And, as he puts it, “How can you tell such [different stories] with the same language?”
There are, of course, themes that recur in Piano’s ouevre. Even from his first major work, the Centre Pompidou he designed with Richard Rogers, Piano was attuned to the sea-changes of the time: a distrust of the institution, a desire to break down the formalities of the past, a need for community space. Thus, the Pompidou became “a joyful urban machine” designed for human interaction.
And while you can certainly point to Piano’s obsession with craftsmanship – Piano comes from a family of builders after all – his experimental efforts with physical materials are almost always meant to explore their very un-physical potential for “flight.”
Lightness, transparency, vibrancy – these characteristics constantly present themselves in Piano’s work, and they have been fine-tuned over time. The Menil Collection, completed in the mid-80s, was Piano’s first triumph in light; ever since, his architecture, unlike any other, has somehow learned to “capture the sun.”

Terrorism vs. Transparency
Thus when Piano begin his design for The New York Times building in New York, transparency and “contextuality” were two sides of the same coin. Piano, who was in New York the day of the terrorist attacks, designed a skyscraper with validity in a post-9/11 world: in comparison to the bulky opacity of the World Trade Center, Piano opted for a tower of light, of transparency, of permeability.
The New York Times architecture critic at the time, Nicolai Ouroussoff, who was working in the building as he wrote his critique, couldn’t hide his delight of it. Ouroussoff found it to be reminiscent of “a more comforting time,” a New York of the 50s and 60s, and, if I may extrapolate, of the 90s, when there was confidence in the marvelous structures that characterized the city.
The tower’s ground floors are open to the public, allowing people to pass through as they journey from 40th to 41st street; Ouroussoff marveled at the “continuous public performance:” “The flow recalls the dynamic energy of Grand Central Terminal’s Great Hall or the Rockefeller Center plaza, proud emblems of early-20th-century mobility.”

The only flaw that Ouroussoff noted was the tower’s rooftop – which, instead of “gathering momentum as it rises” and “dissolving into the sky,” as Piano intended, just “seems to fizzle.”
The building was an attempt to capture the workings of the city itself; Piano wanted the building to stand as an emblem, but at the same time dissolve into the bustle of the city streets. As he told BBC correspondent Razia Iqbal in a fascinating interview:
“There are no technical answers to terrorism – the only technical answer would be living in caverns, which is impossible. Which is why we built The New York Times building transparent and permeable, because transparency is safer than opacity. [...] You cannot answer the risk of terrorism by giving up on the idea of a city being a great human invention, we have to defend it.”
The New York Times Building may have been the first incarnation of Piano’s desire to defend the city, but it was the Shard that would be its ultimate expression.

A Shard Cut From New York’s Cloth
When Hal Foster, a Princeton University Professor, was asked his opinion of The Shard by The Guardian, he quipped, “It looks like a project from the 9/11 competition which grew frustrated with delays on the Hudson and moved to the Thames.” Indeed, each element that Piano considered in the post-9/11 context of the NYT Building is only intensified in the Shard.
The permeability of the New York Times building, which Piano engendered in order to encourage human interaction and movement (causing Ouroussoff to liken its lobby to Grand Central Station), is already inherent to the Shard, as it’s physically placed atop one of London’s most crowded Transportation Hubs. In fact, it was that location which justified the Shard’s existence in Piano’s mind: the Hub was “one of the few positions [in London] where you can have towers.”
Further vital to the Shard’s identity is its multi-functionality, which enhances its permeability further. Piano was insistent that the Shard be filled with restaurants and shops, so the public could use it at all hours of the day – not just until 6pm. Also key is a public viewing gallery, where the public could partake of the building’s staggering views.
Moreover, the glass, which gave The New York Times Tower its transparency, is different in the Shard. Rather than merging with its context, it responds to it; as the light changes, the facade reflects the river, the sky, the city. The pinnacle, which awkwardly “fizzled” in the New York tower, with the Shard, “dissolves into the sky,” to the point where, in Piano’s words, it “breathes in the clouds.”
Unlike the New York Times Building, which depends on the activity around it to give it life, The Shard is very much its own, living entity. Piano’s utopian monument to the city – dense, diverse, and multi-functional - of the 21st century.

The Awful Truth
Of course, as much as the Shard proclaims London’s position as a global city of the future, responding to the context of London as a whole, it comes at the expense of the neighborhood it calls home.
Despite Piano’s claim that the Transportation Hub justifies the Shard, there is no denying the modern skyscraper is completely disruptive to its Victorian surroundings. Nor can it be denied that the Shard would never have been allowed in a historical neighborhood whose residents had money and power – unlike in Southwark, one of London’s poorer boroughs.
And while Piano’s tower extends to the public of London, it has little to offer its immediate neighbors, except, as Nick Stanton, a former leader of Southwark council complained, to walk around it. With a pricey luxury hotel and private apartments leased out to Qatar royalty on the upper floors, it’s hard to imagine the public offerings will be cost-effective. Even the viewing gallery, the supposed “equalizer,” will cost visitors a staggering £24.95 (about $40) a ticket.
The awful truth is that the Shard belongs to London. Just not to Southwark.

In Defense and Defiance
The Shard, which is currently the pinnacle of Renzo Piano’s long, inspired career, has stirred up controversy for its size, its location, its ownership. But it is also a reflection of what a skyscraper, if it is to exist at all, must be in a post-9/11 world.
At that same BBC Interview, a Londoner walked up to the microphone to ask Mr. Piano a question: “I think since 9/11 we’ve been worried a little bit, I have anyway, about iconic buildings. Are you worried that it’s throwing out a bit of a defiant message, towering over London the way it does?”
For Piano, that defiance was the point – but it was also a gamble. Indeed, to some, this glass tower will always be an offensive re-incarnation of the arrogance and power of our pre-9/11 world; but, in the masterful hands of Piano, it’s a quietly intense defense of the city itself.
National September 11 Memorial Museum / Davis Brody Bond

To honor the memory of those who tragically lost their lives in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, New York-based Davis Brody Bond has been commissioned to design the National September 11 Memorial Museum at the heart of the former World Trade Center site in New York. Serving as a complement to the National September 11 Memorial, the museum will tell the story of 9/11 through multimedia displays, archives, narratives and a collection of monumental artifacts, while commemorating the life of every victim of the 2001 and 1993 terrorists attacks.
Continue after the break to learn more.

Rather than treating the museum as an “icon containing exhibits”, Davis Brody Bond (DBB) has designed a structure that is made up of a “series of icons, which are the exhibit”. As visitors embark on their journey through the 125,000 square foot, subterranean museum, their experience is broken up into four primary components.

The first is entrance and orientation. Visitors will pass through the Snohetta-designed Museum Pavilion, whose large atrium provides ample amounts of natural light into depths of the museum while displaying two structural columns rescued from the original towers. The visitors will then descend into the first, below-grade level of the Memorial Hall, transitioning their senses from the bright and active life of the plaza to the quieter, more contemplative environment of the museum.

The procession continues through introductory exhibits positioned along a gradually sloped path. The surface is described as a “meandering ribbon”, whose gentle slope guides the visitor down “as if drawn by gravity”. At key points along this route there are carefully composed views and overlooks into the space beyond, revealing key artifacts and historic resources. At this point the vast scale of the site becomes clear.

Once visitors reach the last viewing platform, they will descend the final stretch of the path to the ‘bedrock’ level, known as the West Chamber, which contains the foundations of the original World Trade Center. Here, the visitor will arrive at the third stage of his/her experience. At this lowest level of the museum and WTC complex, the original column bases and concrete footings that supported the twin towers are exposed in the floor slab of the museum, defining a clear outline of the former towers. A surviving retaining wall or the original WTC, known as the “slurry wall”, is exposed and serves as a backdrop for the 36-foot “Last Column” - the final piece of steel structure that was removed from Ground Zero, whose surfaces had been gradually covered with moving written testaments and photos during the rescue and recovery effort.

The fourth and final stage of the visitor’s experience is a gradual ascent by escalator from ‘bedrock’ back to Memorial Hall, framing controlled views out to the aluminum-clad tower volumes. Arrival in Memorial Hall is followed by a walk back up to the plaza, the memorial fountains and the active life of the city.

With an expected six million visitors per year, security, sustainability and operational efficiency are important components of the design. The Memorial, which was opened on September 11, 2011, and the Museum are designed achieve a LEED Gold rating. The project is also required to meet site specific New York State Executive Order 111 Sustainable Design Guidelines. Design initiatives include reduction in potable water use, increased ventilation, specification of low emitting materials, enhanced commissioning and refrigerant management. The project seeks innovation credits to provide 100% shading of non-pervious surface after five years through extensive tree planting and to design the building to educate visitors on the benefits of green buildings through displays and public programs.
DBB has worked closely with the Museum staff, their consultants and exhibition designers to ensure an integrated design. Unfortunately, a funding dispute between the memorial foundation and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey has temporarily delayed construction. However, completion is expected by 2013.
In the video above, filmed at the 2012 AIA Convention, DBB partner and New York City resident Steven Davis shares his personal experience with both the 2001 and 1993 WTC terrorist attacks, along with story and ideas behind the Memorial Museum.
Reference: Davis Brody Bond









National September 11 Memorial Museum / Davis Brody Bond originally appeared on ArchDaily, the most visited architecture website on 11 Sep 2012.
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Videos: Calatrava, Arad, Dykers, And Others Discuss Rebuilding After 9/11
AIA Architects of Healing: Santiago Calatrava, FAIA via AIANational
This past May at its annual convention, the AIA hosted a special ceremony, titled “The Architects of Healing,” that honored architects involved in post-9/11 memorials and rebuilding efforts. More than 130 architects received AIA presidential citations, with 15 individuals receiving specially commissioned gold medallions to honor their work. The AIA website has videos from the ceremony, including presentations by Santiago Calatrava, Craig Dykers, David Childs, and others—all of whom spoke about their inspiration and response to rebuilding after the tragedy. In the video above, for instance, Calatrava, designer of the WTC Transportation Hub, spoke about “taking the ruins and making something positive.” See more.
All videos are available to watch via the AIA website. In addition to speeches by architectural luminaries, the videos include profiles of the Flight 93 Memorial, the Pentagon rebuilding, and the 9/11 Memorial.
AIA Architects of Healing: Opening Remarks via AIANational
AIA Architects of Healing: Closing Ceremony via AIANational
Videos: Calatrava, Arad, Dykers, And Others Discuss Rebuilding After 9/11
AIA Architects of Healing: Santiago Calatrava, FAIA via AIANational
This past May at its annual convention, the AIA hosted a special ceremony, titled “The Architects of Healing,” that honored architects involved in post-9/11 memorials and rebuilding efforts. More than 130 architects received AIA presidential citations, with 15 individuals receiving specially commissioned gold medallions to honor their work. The AIA website has videos from the ceremony, including presentations by Santiago Calatrava, Craig Dykers, David Childs, and others—all of whom spoke about their inspiration and response to rebuilding after the tragedy. In the video above, for instance, Calatrava, designer of the WTC Transportation Hub, spoke about “taking the ruins and making something positive.” See more.
All videos are available to watch via the AIA website. In addition to speeches by architectural luminaries, the videos include profiles of the Flight 93 Memorial, the Pentagon rebuilding, and the 9/11 Memorial.
AIA Architects of Healing: Opening Remarks via AIANational
AIA Architects of Healing: Closing Ceremony via AIANational